Five years ago had I read this post I would have had a different response. There is actually some evidence out there that different frequencies, even in music, have a way of helping patients with everything from kidney failure to shingles.
I just went to Grok and put in the fullowing question: Is there frequency research that deals with kidney failure?
I am finding Grok gives me answers that I can never get with duckduckgo and certainly not with google. Check out frequencies, music, and other medical problems. You won’t find this information in the NYTimes or google.
a cat purring is also supposed to have healing properties
and a baby in the womb is affected by noise outside
pretty wild stuff
“There is actually some evidence out there that different frequencies, even in music, have a way of helping patients with everything from kidney failure to shingles.”
In 1934, 16 terminally ill cancer patients walked into a research facility at the University of Southern California for treatment, and three months later 14 of them walked out cured of the disease. Five medical doctors pronounced them free of cancer.
The cancer cure involved directing EM waves at the virus microbe that infected normal cells. The generated waves literally blew up the cancer virus.
The researchers applied this revolutionary therapy for three minutes daily on every third day. The machine used in the treatment produced an oscillating electrical field that targeted the natural frequency of the virus. By adjusting the amplitude, the cancer virus was literally blown apart. The virus had zero chance of repairing itself or mutating. After that, the bodies of the patients resumed their normal healing abilities and recovered themselves.
https://medium.com/@davidpaul777/the-forgotten-cancer-cure-aa5812946265
The body also has a defense mechanism called RNases (ribonuclease) to destroy viral RNA.
Ribonuclease is an enzyme that catalyzes the hydrolyses of of RNA. The process degrades RNA molecules, making it the first line of defense against RNA viruses by inhibiting their growth and spread.
There’s also research with light-based viral inactivation, using UV, blue and red light.
No, I’m not a biochemist. I like reading about research in this field.